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11779 links · page 74 of 118


  • 2026-07-07
    T E X T F I L E S D O T C O M
    Textfiles.com, maintained by Jason Scott, is a massive archive preserving thousands of ASCII text files from the mid-1980s BBS era, capturing the raw digital culture of early online communities. The site spans decades of computing history with companion projects covering BBS history, ASCII art scenes, documentary footage, and more, making it an indispensable time capsule of pre-web internet culture.
  • 2026-07-07
    T E X T F I L E S D O T C O M
    Textfiles.com is a massive archive preserving the text-based culture of the mid-1980s BBS era, collecting thousands of ASCII files that document the early underground internet scene. Run by Jason Scott, the site spans decades of digital history including BBS lists, ASCII art, documentary resources, and text artifacts that offer a vivid window into pre-web computing culture.
  • 2026-07-07
    T E X T F I L E S D O T C O M
    A mirror of the legendary Textfiles.com, this site preserves thousands of ASCII text files from the mid-1980s BBS era, offering a remarkable window into early digital culture and underground computing history. Visitors can explore materials spanning BBS documentation, ASCII art, historical timelines, and audio artifacts that capture the spirit of pre-web online communities.
  • 2026-07-07
    T E X T F I L E S D O T C O M
    Textfiles.com is a massive archive preserving the text files, culture, and history of the mid-1980s BBS era, curated by Jason Scott as a window into early digital underground communities. Visitors can explore ASCII art, BBS history, documentary materials, and thousands of original text files spanning hacking, phreaking, and early internet subculture.
  • 2026-07-07
    T E X T F I L E S D O T C O M
    Textfiles.com is a massive archive dedicated to preserving the text files, culture, and history of the mid-1980s BBS scene, curated by Jason Scott over nearly 25 years. Visitors can explore ASCII art, BBS documentation, historical timelines, and thousands of files that capture the early digital underground in its raw, unfiltered form.
  • 2026-07-07
    teeeeeega's blog
    Teeeeeega's blog is a minimalist diary covering retro tech, digital minimalism, productivity, and scattered personal thoughts. Powered by Bear and accompanied by a newsletter, it offers early access to ideas the author explores in both written posts and YouTube travel videos.
  • 2026-07-07
    Telehack
    Telehack is a simulated recreation of the early internet and ARPANET, accessible via web browser, telnet, or SSH, letting users explore a nostalgic command-line environment with hundreds of vintage systems to interact with. It faithfully recreates the feel of old-school hacking culture and pre-web network exploration, making it a fascinating time capsule for retro computing enthusiasts.
  • 2026-07-07
    THE 88×31 ARCHIVE
    A massive archive of over 31,000 unique 88x31 pixel buttons scraped from the GeoCities archives before the site's 2009 shutdown, preserving a beloved artifact of 1990s and 2000s web culture. Visitors can browse paginated galleries of the tiny banners or download the full 156MB dataset, making it an invaluable resource for old-web enthusiasts and digital historians alike.
  • 2026-07-07
    The AeroVVVeb
    AeroVVVeb is a nostalgic personal site styled as a Windows 98 boot screen, complete with a mock BIOS POST sequence and boot manager interface. It leans into retro computing aesthetics with Flash content via Ruffle and autoplaying audio, making it a charming throwback to the late-90s PC experience.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Blue OS Museum
    The Blue OS Museum is a collaborative project dedicated to reviewing every build of Windows and MS-DOS from their origins in the 1970s and 80s through 2009, plus documenting GUIs from other companies of that era. Contributors Blue Horizon, gv3u, gogo2, Lace, and Lucas Brooks have assembled reviews, screenshots, and archived videos of old Microsoft releases, making it a treasure trove for operating system history enthusiasts.
  • 2026-07-07
    The CPU Shack - History of Microprocessors & CPU Tech
    The CPU Shack is a remarkable online museum cataloging over 20,000 processors from 150+ manufacturers, spanning Intel, AMD, Cyrix, Soviet chips, and many obscure historical CPUs. Visitors can explore a "CPU of the Day" feature, EPROM galleries, detailed reference guides, and even purchase reproduction test boards for vintage processor families.
  • 2026-07-07
    The Eric Experiment
    Eric's personal tech site covers retro computing projects with impressive depth, including a custom-built 486 computer, Toshiba Libretto repairs, Brazilian Famiclones, and vintage web nostalgia. The site spans a wide range of hands-on topics from 3D printing to woodworking, but retro hardware builds and old-school computing are clearly the heart of the experiment.
  • 2026-07-07
    The indigoparadox Web Zone
    indigoparadox's Web Zone is a technical infodump covering computers, devices, projects, tutorials, and utilities, with a focus on retro and alternative operating systems. The creator logs how-to knowledge for their own reference and shares it publicly, drawing from physical books and obscure corners of the Internet Archive to preserve hard-to-find information.
  • 2026-07-07
    The TEXTFILES.COM BBS List
    A massive historical archive of dial-up BBS phone numbers compiled from numerous sources, preserving a comprehensive record of Bulletin Board Systems from the pre-internet era. Maintained by Jason Scott of textfiles.com, the list includes FAQs, statistics, an introduction to BBS culture, and even a link to the documentary film about BBSes.
  • 2026-07-07
    The TEXTFILES.COM BBS Timeline
    A comprehensive chronological timeline of Bulletin Board System history, cataloging 261 events from 1874 through 2002, created as research support for a BBS documentary in production. Built by the team behind TEXTFILES.COM, it invites community contributions and corrections to fill in the gaps of this landmark era in pre-internet online culture.
  • 2026-07-07
    thefoggiest.dev
    Thefoggiest.dev is a long-running personal blog stretching back to 2005, where the author dives deep into retro computing topics like Atari ST games, MSX hardware, and classic software alongside Linux, self-hosting, and IndieWeb participation. Posts combine nostalgic enthusiasm with technical detail, making it a rich read for anyone who grew up with 8-bit and 16-bit machines.
  • 2026-07-07
    This is gasconheart’s web page at tilde club
    Gasconheart's tilde.club personal page is home base for a member of the old-web tilde community, with links to multiple tilde and SDF accounts, a blog, and even membership in the Cassette Tape Storage Council. The site reflects the hobbyist Unix shell community aesthetic, connecting visitors to a network of small public-access Linux servers and retro-web culture.
  • 2026-07-07
    tilde news
    Tilde News is a community link aggregator focused on retro hardware, UNIX systems, open-source software, and vintage computing topics, curated by contributors like sevan and lettuce. Stories cover everything from restoring Sun SPARCstations to running Linux on obsolete mobile phones, making it a rich resource for enthusiasts of classic and alternative computing.
  • 2026-07-07
    Time Travelling Birb
    Amaruuk's lovingly crafted archive of early web ephemera, featuring collections of blinkies, GIFs, and the nostalgic aesthetics of personal homepages from 1998 through the mid-2000s. The site includes galleries, shrines, a 'time machine' organized by year, and various quirky extra pages celebrating the look and feel of old-school web culture.
  • 2026-07-07
    Tips for Torrenters | One Terabyte of Kilobyte Age
    One Terabyte of Kilobyte Age is a research blog by despens dedicated to digging through the archived GeoCities torrent, documenting and exploring the old web's cultural artifacts. This post offers practical Unix-based tips for downloading, decrunching, and self-hosting the massive GeoCities torrent archive, making it a useful technical resource for digital preservationists.
  • 2026-07-07
    Toca do Rio McCloud
    Rio McCloud's personal digital garden covers technology tutorials spanning Windows, Linux, Android, cybersecurity, retrocomputing, and embedded systems, alongside art, comics, and personal blogs. A proudly independent Neocities site, it serves as a haven from algorithm-driven platforms with a wide range of original content to explore.
  • 2026-07-07
    tomasino (dot) org
    James Tomasino's personal hub showcases a technologist and creative who is passionate about retro computing, the Fediverse, Gopher/Gemini protocols, and fiction writing. Notable projects include Cosmic Voyage, a collaborative sci-fi terminal universe, and Stitchy, a crochet pattern generator from images.
  • 2026-07-07
    Tvdog's Archive (Home Page)
    Tvdog's Archive is a dedicated resource for Tandy 1000-series computer enthusiasts, hosting files, FAQs, DOS Internet programs, and FTP archives for these classic machines. The site also features photo galleries of multiple Tandy 1000 models and curates links to major DOS software archives like Simtel, Garbo, and PC-Blue.
  • 2026-07-07
    ucanet - U Create A Net
    ucanet is a fascinating project that builds a separate web ecosystem specifically for retro computers, complete with its own alternative-root DNS server and a fresh namespace where users can register free domains. Visitors can find installation guides, browse over 500 registered domains in a retro-friendly site directory, and even download older browsers like Firefox 2 to access the network as it was meant to be experienced.
  • 2026-07-07
    VC&G | » Animated Christmas GIFs of Yore
    Vintage Computing and Gaming (VC&G) is Benj Edwards' long-running blog dedicated to classic computers, retro gaming, and computing history. This particular post showcases a delightful collection of animated Christmas GIFs rescued from the late-1990s web, including files once hosted on GeoCities, offering a nostalgic glimpse at early internet holiday culture.
  • 2026-07-07
    VETUSWARE.COM - the biggest free abandonware collection in the universe
    Vetusware.com bills itself as the biggest free abandonware collection in the universe, offering downloads of vintage software spanning DOS, early Windows, OS/2, drivers, DBMS tools, and office applications from the 1980s and 1990s. Built by Juliano Vetus since 2004, the site features thousands of titles organized by category, with popularity rankings, a most-wanted request system, and a community forum for retro computing enthusiasts.
  • 2026-07-07
    Vintage Computing and Gaming | The Retrogaming and Retrocomputing Blogazine
    Vintage Computing and Gaming is Benj Edwards' long-running blogazine celebrating the history of classic computers and video games from the 1960s through the 1990s, now marking its 20th anniversary online. Packed with interviews, articles, and historical commentary covering systems like the Atari, NES, TRS-80, ZX Spectrum, and early Macintosh, it stands as a rich archive for anyone passionate about retro tech history.
  • 2026-07-07
    Violet-99
    Violet-99 is Swarit's personal archive dedicated to exploring and recreating the aesthetic of the old web, built entirely with handcrafted static HTML and CSS. Featuring a synthwave-styled terminal interface, a photo gallery, logs, and a guestbook, the site is a loving homage to early internet culture and design.
  • 2026-07-07
    ViperCard
    ViperCard is an open source recreation and reimagination of Apple's classic 1987 HyperCard application, rebuilt to run in modern browsers. Visitors can launch the app directly, play embedded games like Glider and Spaceman Gamma, browse scripting API documentation, and follow a crowdfunded roadmap for features like HC stack import and MIDI music creation.
  • 2026-07-07
    wass good
    YUDOSAI's sprawling personal site covers an eclectic mix of retro computing adventures, game music, anime, manga, and DIY web projects, with dedicated blog sections for each interest. Standout entries include PC-8001 tinkering, a RISC-V laptops list, a first Atari game writeup, and a music exhibit chronicling the creator's history with the Caustic DAW.
  • 2026-07-07
    Web Badges World | The ultimate archive of 80x15 pixel button art
    Web Badges World is an archive of nearly 4,000 classic 80x15 pixel buttons that once decorated websites across the early internet, complete with a history of how these tiny badges were used for webrings, directories, RSS feeds, and browser identification. Created by Arthur, the site lets visitors filter badges by category, file type, and animation, making it an invaluable preservation effort for anyone nostalgic about the visual culture of the early web.
  • 2026-07-07
    Welcome to AOLEmu
    AOLEmu is an open-source project that emulates the classic AOL client experience, complete with instant messaging, chatrooms, and email services built to replicate the look and feel of AOL v4.0. Built in C# with a nostalgic UI, it has even been featured on Netflix's HIGH SCORE documentary series covering gaming and internet history.
  • 2026-07-07
    welcome to my ~ page
    TheGiant's tilde.town homepage is a love letter to the old internet, covering BBS systems, telnet, MUDs, Usenet, Unix shell access, and hand-coded HTML in the spirit of dial-up era computing. The page doubles as a curated link collection pointing to active BBSes, MUD directories, and free Usenet servers for those who still embrace these retro communities.
  • 2026-07-07
    Welcome to Spode’s Abode! | Spode’s Abode
    Andrew Spode, a former UK technology journalist who tested components for publications like Computer Shopper and TrustedReviews, has revived his personal site to share knowledge about retro computing hardware and e-waste refurbishment. Visitors can find articles, a shop for refurbished components, and contributions to archival projects like TheRetroWeb and archive.org.
  • 2026-07-07
    Welcome to the Neon Systems
    Neongod's personal site covers retro computing topics including Commodore 64, Amiga, and classic Macintosh hardware, with content on restoration, preservation, and tracker music. Notable features include downloadable C64 assembly tools, a Lukhash tape project, and availability via the Gemini protocol for old-web enthusiasts.
  • 2026-07-07
    What happened?
    Machine Girl World is a nostalgic personal site by a creator channeling the chaotic energy of 1990s and early 2000s unsupervised internet browsing, complete with mood indicators, pixel dolls, and webring memberships. Visitors can explore sections like goodies, a diary, and favorites, all wrapped in a deliberately retro aesthetic that celebrates old-web culture.
  • 2026-07-07
    What's new? - Retro Gallery
    Retro Gallery is a dedicated archive preserving pixel art and graphics from classic platforms including Commodore 64, ZX Spectrum, Amiga, and Atari, with thousands of images uploaded by a growing community. Visitors can browse a Hall of Fame, convert retro image formats directly online, and explore curated collections like the MSX Pixel Art Preservation project and coverdisk scans.
  • 2026-07-07
    Whatever Happened To. . . Webrings | Insufficient Scotty
    InsufficientScotty is JohnScott's pop-culture and tech nostalgia blog, featuring a 'Whatever Happened To' series that digs into forgotten corners of early internet history like webrings, GeoCities, and the quirks of web culture past. This particular post traces the origins of webrings from the author's own first HTML project in 1994, making it a personal and surprisingly detailed look at a once-ubiquitous web phenomenon.
  • 2026-07-07
    Wii Shop Channel
    A faithful web-based remake of the Nintendo Wii Shop Channel, recreating the iconic storefront's interface, music, and visual style in the browser. Fans of the original Wii era will recognize the distinctive keyboard layout, dot-matrix text fields, and looping background audio that made the original channel so memorable.
  • 2026-07-07
    Winbows XP
    Winbows XP is a creative Neocities personal site styled as a Windows XP desktop interface, complete with familiar UI elements like Start menu, My Documents, Paint, and Notepad reimagined as navigation. The site leans into 90s/early-2000s nostalgia with an aesthetic tribute to the classic operating system, offering a charming and interactive old-web experience.
  • 2026-07-07
    Windows 98 Icon Viewer
    Alex Meub's Windows 98 Icon Viewer is an interactive browser-based gallery showcasing the classic icon set from Microsoft's iconic 1998 operating system. Visitors can browse and download the original pixel-art icons including the Recycle Bin, My Computer, and Documents folders, making it a handy nostalgia resource for retro computing enthusiasts and designers.
  • 2026-07-07
    Windows Media Player Skins Archive
    A comprehensive archive of Windows Media Player skins, preserving hundreds of classic WMP themes ranging from official Xbox and game tie-in skins to fan-made designs from the early 2000s era. Each entry includes a preview image and a direct download link, with a bulk ZIP option for grabbing the entire collection at once.
  • 2026-07-07
    Windows Update Restored
    Update Windows 95, NT 4.0, 98, Me, 2000, and XP the old way!: Windows Update Restored brings back the classic Windows Update experience for legacy Microsoft operating systems including Windows 95, NT 4.0, 98, Me, 2000, and XP. Visitors can download Internet Explorer versions and service packs the old-fashioned way, making it a valuable resource for vintage Windows enthusiasts and retro PC hobbyists.
  • 2026-07-07
    WinWorld
    Paint Shop Pro 3.x: WinWorld is an online museum and archive dedicated to preserving abandonware software, and this page covers JASC Paint Shop Pro 3.x, the classic bitmap graphics editor first released in 1990. Visitors can download original releases of Paint Shop Pro 3.0 and 3.12, read release notes, view screenshots, and explore the software's history from its shareware origins to its Corel acquisition.
  • 2026-07-07
    XP NetCenter – The Center of Your Internet
    XP NetCenter is a lovingly crafted nostalgia trip recreating the feel of an early 2000s web portal, complete with a Winamp player, 88x31 buttons, ICQ status display, a read-only shoutbox, and downloads of classic software like mIRC and MSN Messenger. The site meticulously mimics the aesthetic of the dial-up era with green-on-black terminal styling, IE6 popups, webrings, and a sprawling changelog that documents every retro flourish added to the experience.
  • 2026-07-07
    Yay! You found that 90s site!
    A lovingly crafted tribute to the mid-1990s web aesthetic, complete with loud tile backgrounds, bold colors, a guestbook, and a MIDI file, built on Neocities as a modern recreation of old-school web design. Highlights include an Amiga 4000T 3D tech demo, a cyber cat hangout page, retro links to BBSes and Gopher sites, and membership in the Retronaut Webring.
  • 2026-07-07
    Zophar's Domain
    Zophar's Domain is one of the oldest and most comprehensive emulation resource sites on the web, offering downloads for emulators across dozens of classic platforms including NES, SNES, N64, Sega, and Commodore 64. Visitors can also find video game music files (NSF, PSF, SPC formats), ROM hacks, savestates, cheats, translations, and technical documents, making it an essential stop for retro gaming and emulation enthusiasts.
  • 2026-07-07
    ~a13x . home
    A sparse tilde.club personal page belonging to a13x, featuring a note about writing HTML on a Miyoo Mini+ handheld terminal and a small collection of random desk items. The Miyoo Mini+ focus and tilde.club setting give it a retro/hobbyist computing flavor, linking to a webring for fellow tilde enthusiasts.
  • 2026-07-07
    ~beckstrom's tilde.club page
    Chris Beckstrom's tilde.club homepage embraces the old-web aesthetic on purpose, featuring a geek code block, animated GIFs, and logged entries about SSH tricks, sshfs mounting, and Unix tinkering. A classic shared Unix server community page from an elder millennial who has been online since 1996, blending nostalgia with genuine command-line enthusiasm.
  • 2026-07-07
    ~brennen (prop., ed., pub., sysop)
    Brennen's tilde.club home on the old-school Unix shared server squiggle.city features a HyperCard-inspired stack of dated personal notes, textfiles, and reflections on command-line tools, DOS software, text editors, and shell scripting. Packed with geek charm, the site touches on everything from git workflows to Perl feed scripts, nostalgia-tripping on vintage software, and musings on the indie web.
  • 2026-07-07
    ~lucidiot
    Lucidiot's personal tilde.town page is a classic old-web haven packed with nostalgic web buttons, Netscape-era logos, anti-NFT badges, and links to quirky projects like a virtual plant and transport accident RSS feeds. The site radiates vintage internet enthusiasm with references to Windows XP, MSN Messenger via Escargot, and a handcrafted collection of ~town logos released under WTFPL.
  • 2026-07-07
    ~tweska on tilde.club
    Tweska's tilde.club homepage highlights their hands-on project building a Zilog Z80-based computer from scratch, complete with breadboard prototype photos. They also created the Tilde.Club Gallery, an automatically updated showcase of member pages on the tildeverse network.
  • 2026-07-07
    ୨୧ Kawaii Attic ୨୧
    Kawaii Attic, created by Arunyi, is a lovingly curated archive of cute websites from the early 2000s, celebrating the golden age of kawaii internet culture with pixel art, adoptions, dollz, sozai, and more. Visitors can browse hundreds of linked sites organized into categories like personal pages, fanlistings, cliques, webrings, and sozai resources, making it a treasure trove for anyone nostalgic for the old web's charming aesthetic.
  • 2026-07-07
    “Powered by...”, or the phenomenon of web software buttons — Daniil Baturin
    Daniil Baturin digs into the history and cultural significance of 'Powered by' web software buttons, those nostalgic 88x31 badges promoting browsers, servers, and tools that once decorated countless early web pages. With 72 images collected and a thoughtful analysis of why these buttons existed and what they reveal about early web culture, this is a fascinating piece of internet archaeology.
  • 2026-07-07
    ★ ICHOR.system
    ICHOR.system is a stylized personal page by Icarusdean, presented entirely in ASCII art with a retro terminal aesthetic. The site leans heavily into old-school computer culture with its text-based layout and monospaced visual design.
  • 2026-07-07
    msuweb.montclair.edu
    A sparse university faculty or student page hosted on Montclair State University's web server, identifiable by its MSU domain structure. The page contains almost no visible content, with only a single image and one link present in its structure.
  • 2026-07-07
    Home Page
    David R. Gagnon, MD MPH PhD, maintains this faculty page for the Boston University School of Public Health's Biostatistics department, offering links to SAS macros, statistical and medical resources, and government references. The page includes a NESUG 2013 presentation and various curated bookmarks for researchers and students in biostatistics and public health.
  • 2026-07-07
    Home
    Inventing the Organizations of the 21st Century: Hosted on the MIT Sloan School of Management server, this site archives the six-year 'Inventing the Organizations of the 21st Century' research initiative, which ran from 1994 to 1999 under professors Thomas Malone and Michael Scott Morton. Visitors can explore working papers, a Process Handbook, profiles of innovative organizations, and a manifesto outlining new models for 21st-century business structures.
  • 2026-07-07
    Home
    Michael L. Nelson, Old Dominion University: Michael L. Nelson is a Computer Science professor at Old Dominion University whose homepage highlights his research in web science, digital preservation, and digital libraries, including work on the Memento and OAI-PMH specifications. A former NASA Langley researcher and NSF CAREER award recipient, he has been featured in outlets like The New Yorker, The Atlantic, and the BBC for his work on web archiving and repository systems.
  • 2026-07-07
    Jian Wu, Old Dominion University | CiteSeerX
    Dr. Jian Wu is an Associate Professor of Computer Science at Old Dominion University whose research focuses on digital libraries, scholarly document analysis, open science, and natural language processing. The page chronicles his lab's latest accepted papers at top venues like JCDL and ACM Hypertext, lists collaborators from institutions worldwide, and links to his publications, teaching, and the LAMP-SYS Lab.
  • 2026-07-07
    Kyle Dekle's Portfolio
    Kyle Dekle, an agricultural education student at Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College in Georgia, built this portfolio site to showcase his resume, philosophy of education, and diversity statement for prospective employers and academic purposes. Visitors will find a window into the professional development of an aspiring agricultural education teacher, complete with personal background and an issues debate section.
  • 2026-07-07
    Math and Science Fiction
    The official course page for Dartmouth College's 'Math and Science Fiction' class from Winter 1999, taught by Professors Davies and Trout, exploring the intersection of mathematics and science fiction literature. Featuring a syllabus, assignments, course readings from authors like Isaac Asimov, Greg Egan, and Ursula Le Guin, plus student group project pages covering topics like chaos theory, the Mandelbrot set, and game theory.
  • 2026-07-07
    Matt's Home Page
    Matt Covington's personal homepage documents his experience as a deaf student at Rochester Institute of Technology's National Technical Institute for the Deaf, including a dedicated 'Hearing Journey' section that chronicles his cochlear implant experience. The site includes a resume, CI (cochlear implant) information, FAQs, and photos, making it a personal window into life with hearing loss and assistive technology.
  • 2026-07-07
    RF and Microwave Engineering
    Dr. Ernest Kim's course page for EEE 194 RF and Microwave Engineering at the University of San Diego offers a comprehensive set of lecture notes, assignments, and supplementary materials for Spring 2001. Visitors will find Smith Chart tutorials, Matlab filter examples, ADS simulation guides, and downloadable tools covering everything from low-pass filter design to RF amplifier circuits.
  • 2026-07-07
    Sampath Jayarathna
    The academic homepage of Sampath Jayarathna, Associate Professor of Computer Science at Old Dominion University and recipient of the 2021 NSF CAREER Award, covering his research in neuro information retrieval, data science, and human-information interaction. Visitors can explore his publications, CV, research lab, grants, and a mix of personal interests including a bookshelf and movie list.
  • 2026-07-07
    Teddy Warner - Fab Academy 2021 - Teddy Warner - Fab Academy 2021
    Teddy Warner's Fab Academy 2021 documentation site chronicles his coursework at the Charlotte lab, covering topics from computer-aided design and electronics production to 3D printing and embedded programming. The site serves as a detailed academic portfolio with weekly assignment documentation and a final project focused on an assistive aquaponics fish tank.
  • 2026-07-07
    The design of MOO agents
    Implications from a study on multi-modal collaborative problem solving: A 1997 academic paper from TECFA at the University of Geneva examining how pairs of subjects used multimodal communication tools in a text-based virtual environment called TecfaMOO to solve mystery games collaboratively. The research proposes a novel class of artificial MOO agents called 'observers' that compute interaction statistics to assist human or AI tutors in collaborative learning environments.
  • 2026-07-07
    Trail Blazers
    Hosted on the Merz Akademie domain, Trail Blazers appears to be an educational project or exhibition connected to this German university of design, film, and art. The page is sparse, featuring only a title and a handful of images, leaving its full content largely undetermined from the available data.
  • 2026-07-07
    Vikas Ashok
    Vikas Ashok is an Assistant Professor of Computer Science at Old Dominion University whose research focuses on Human-Centered Computing and AI-driven assistive technologies for people with vision impairments. The page serves as his academic homepage, listing his research lab, contact details, and courses taught including Natural Language Processing, Databases, and Artificial Intelligence.
  • 2026-07-07
    Yordi - A Lifelong Journey of Growth
    Yordi is a teacher and coach who writes reflective posts about education, personal growth, and life observations, including his experiences mentoring software development students through internships. The blog blends professional insights from the classroom with personal musings on topics like music, balance, and self-improvement.
  • 2026-07-07
    lasfs.org
    The Los Angeles Science Fantasy Society (LASFS) is one of the oldest science fiction fan clubs in the world, with a clubhouse in Reseda where members gather for weekly meetings, game nights, and special events. The site offers access to their newsletter 'De Profundis', meeting minutes, board rules, and details about their recently opened new clubhouse.
  • 2026-07-07
    b1ackaura.neocities.org
    b1ackaura is a creator of AI character cards for SillyTavern, focusing on quality, unique story themes, and regex scripting to give each card a distinct feel. The site hosts original character cards alongside resources and a changelog, with a strong emphasis on craft and testing over quantity.
  • 2026-07-07
    the-selvan.neocities.org
    The Selvan is a richly imagined fantasy and speculative biology worldbuilding project featuring original lore, magic systems, and cosmic storytelling. Regularly updated with new content, this site chronicles the universe of the Selvan with a dark, star-themed aesthetic and creative world-building depth.
  • 2026-07-07
    sfnorthwest.org
    This page appears to be part of the SF Northwest organization website, likely listing science fiction conventions in the Pacific Northwest region. The minimal content visible suggests a conventions calendar or directory for local sci-fi fans.
  • 2026-07-07
    unclehugo.com
    Uncle Hugo's is one of America's oldest and most beloved science fiction and fantasy bookstores, based in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The site serves as an online presence for the iconic shop, offering information about their inventory, history, and upcoming events for SF/F fans.
  • 2026-07-07
    — Nonstop Press
    Nonstop Press is a small independent publisher specializing in art monographs, pop culture, and science fiction and fantasy literature, including limited edition hardcovers and fanzine history collections. Their catalog features rare titles covering figures like Lee Brown Coye and early SF fandom, with works connected to legends such as Ray Bradbury, Harlan Ellison, and Marion Zimmer Bradley.
  • 2026-07-07
    .Stellar Archive.
    Stellar Archive is a Nekoweb personal site centered around Star Wars, featuring a listings section and participation in a Star Wars Webring. The image-heavy layout suggests a fan-focused shrine aesthetic with stamps, badges, and fanlisting affiliates tied to the Star Wars universe.
  • 2026-07-07
    Abyss & Apex | Hugo-Nominated Magazine of Speculative Fiction
    Abyss & Apex is a Hugo-nominated quarterly magazine of speculative fiction featuring original short stories, flash fiction, poetry, and small press book reviews from a wide range of authors. Each issue showcases a diverse lineup of science fiction and fantasy works, making it a rich destination for fans of imaginative literature.
  • 2026-07-07
    Ansible Home/Links
    Ansible is the legendary SF news publication run by David Langford, offering a comprehensive links directory covering science fiction fandom, awards, fanzines, publishers, conventions, and author resources. With hundreds of curated links spanning SF organizations, news blogs, fan funds, and the SF Encyclopedia, it serves as an essential hub for the science fiction community.
  • 2026-07-07
    Asociación Española de Fantasía, Ciencia Ficción y Terror – Asociación Española de Fantasía, Ciencia Ficción y Terror
    The Asociación Española de Fantasía, Ciencia Ficción y Terror (Pórtico) is Spain's national organization dedicated to promoting fantasy, science fiction, horror, and related genres across all creative forms. It organizes the annual HispaCón convention, awards the prestigious Ignotus prizes, publishes magazines, and hosts Twitch and YouTube programming for genre fans.
  • 2026-07-07
    Astounding Science Fiction
    Andrew May's dedicated reference site covers Astounding Science Fiction magazine from its golden era of July 1939 to September 1960, celebrating editor John W. Campbell's legendary run and the writers he championed including Asimov, Heinlein, and Van Vogt. Visitors will find a comprehensive story index, factual articles on topics like SF prophecy and British reprint editions, and deep-dive pieces on pulp fiction history.
  • 2026-07-07
    Aurealis — Science Fiction & Fantasy
    Aurealis is Australia's longest-running science fiction and fantasy magazine, published by Chimaera Publications and edited by Stephen Higgins, featuring original short stories, non-fiction articles, art, and reviews in each issue. Subscribers get access to a rich mix of speculative fiction from both established and emerging Australian and international authors, along with editorial columns and the prestigious Aurealis Awards.
  • 2026-07-07
    Baedoor
    Toma (Toma400) has built an original steampunk/fantasy universe called Baedoor since 2004, a richly imagined world focused on civilizations, cultural tensions, and everyday struggles rather than the typical hero narrative. The site invites writers, artists, pixel art creators, and coders to contribute to a lifelong dream of a full 3D RPG set in this universe, drawing inspiration from classics like Morrowind and Arcanum.
  • 2026-07-07
    Baltimore Science Fiction Society [Version HH/DA-716]
    The Baltimore Science Fiction Society (BSFS) is a 501(c)3 non-profit club based in Baltimore, Maryland, dedicated to science fiction, fantasy, and speculative literature, hosting regular events like film nights, writer's workshops, book clubs, and panels since at least 1996. The site serves as the hub for their community activities, including their annual amateur writing contest, the Balticon convention, lending library, and roundtable discussions featuring prominent authors and editors.
  • 2026-07-07
    Barba Non DB
    Barba Non DB is a personal database cataloging nearly 1,800 books, episodes, fanzines, and other media its creator has read or watched, with a strong emphasis on the Star Trek universe. Visitors can browse by series, tags, characters, and names, or follow recent posts diving into Star Trek book history and reverse engineering XP3 archives.
  • 2026-07-07
    BASFA
    Main Page: BASFA, the Bay Area Science Fiction Association, is a weekly social club for science fiction fans that meets every Monday evening in San Jose, California. The site covers meeting details, membership info, a fanzine, photo archives, and club rules for this long-running community group.
  • 2026-07-07
    Betwixt | A Magazine of Fantasy, Science Fiction & Everything in Between
    Betwixt is an independent literary magazine dedicated to publishing original short fiction in the fantasy, science fiction, and speculative genres, with issues featuring multiple authors per installment. Issue 11 showcases stories ranging from lich mythology to Arthurian legend, offering a curated reading experience for fans of imaginative short fiction.
  • 2026-07-07
    Bibliographie deutschsprachiger SF-Stories und Bücher
    Created and maintained by Christian Pree since 1998, this is a comprehensive bibliography of German-language science fiction and fantasy stories and books, organized by author, translator, and year of publication. With tens of thousands of entries spanning countless authors and decades of publishing history, it stands as a remarkable reference work for German SF collectors and enthusiasts.
  • 2026-07-07
    Bill's world
    Bill's World features an in-depth exploration of Larry Niven's Ringworld, the iconic science fiction megastructure, complete with detailed descriptions, connections to the Dyson Sphere concept, and references to its appearances in Iain M Banks' Culture novels and the Halo games. The site also includes POVRay rendered images and resources related to the Ringworld concept, making it a treat for hard SF enthusiasts.
  • 2026-07-07
    BRITISH FANZINE BIBLIOGRAPHY – 1931-2000
    Rob Hansen's exhaustive bibliography catalogs British science fiction fanzines from 1931 to 2000, organized by decade with searchable listings and detailed publication records. A remarkable reference work for fans of SF fandom history, it covers printed, hectographed, and other amateur publications while linking to digitized copies of old UK fanzines available online.
  • 2026-07-07
    Challenging Destiny
    Challenging Destiny is a Canadian science fiction and fantasy short story magazine published by Crystalline Sphere Publishing, featuring authors and illustrators from around the world across 25 issues. The site archives all interviews, reviews, and story previews from the magazine's run, making it a rich resource for fans of short-form speculative fiction.
  • 2026-07-07
    Christina Schulman's Science Fiction Reviews
    Christina Schulman's 'Epiphyte Book Review' is an extensive collection of science fiction book reviews, many originally published in the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review and various SF newsletters and forums. The site features an alphabetically organized index of dozens of reviewed titles spanning well-known authors like Neil Gaiman, Greg Egan, and Steven Brust, making it a handy reference for SF readers seeking informed recommendations.
  • 2026-07-07
    ChrisW's Home Page
    Christopher Weuve's personal site covers his passions as a naval analyst, wargame designer, and science fiction enthusiast, with sections dedicated to an extensive book library of over 9,000 volumes, naval SF reading lists, and tabletop game design including a Vector Movement System. The site has a strong science fiction flavor throughout, from the Exordium fan page and mailing list to the space travel fiction lists and naval SF recommendations.
  • 2026-07-07
    Ciencia Ficción en la Revista Axxón
    Axxón is a long-running Argentine digital magazine dedicated to science fiction, fantasy, and horror, publishing short stories, novels, essays, news, comics, and illustrations since 1989. With over 480 million visits and 309 issues, it serves as a comprehensive hub for Spanish-language speculative fiction, including an encyclopedia of Argentine SF and downloadable editions for mobile devices.
  • 2026-07-07
    corru.observer
    corru.observer is an immersive interactive fiction and alternate reality experience built around a fictional universe involving neural implants, mindspikes, and dystopian data management systems. Visitors navigate a deeply atmospheric interface layered with fictional corporate branding, settings menus, and ominous warnings that blur the line between website and in-world terminal.
  • 2026-07-07
    Cultural SF and Movie Learnings
    Run by Sorin Camner, this Romanian-language blog covers science fiction literature, film, and fan community events, with a strong focus on the Romanian SF scene including the ProspectArt literary circle and the Societatea Română de Science Fiction și Fantasy. Posts span years of SF news, book announcements, convention coverage, and cultural commentary for Romanian SF enthusiasts.
  • 2026-07-07
    cyberdank.world
    Cyberdank.world is a personal creative hub exploring science fiction, gaming, history, art, and technology with a retro space-age aesthetic. The creator shares music on Bandcamp and SoundCloud, maintains a Hebrew-language blog, and openly tracks their sobriety journey alongside webrings and shrines.
  • 2026-07-07
    Dark Carnival Bookstore
    Dark Carnival is a beloved independent bookstore in Berkeley, California specializing in science fiction, fantasy, mystery, and horror titles. The shop is known for its knowledgeable staff, rare and out-of-print books, signed editions, and mail order service.
  • 2026-07-07
    dark_info
    dark_info is a sparse personal hub where the creator shares random thoughts, ideas, and writings with a focus on sci-fi and 'schizo posting' style content. It includes PGP keys, a GitHub link, and a webring, giving it the feel of a privacy-conscious old-web personal corner.
  • 2026-07-07
    Darker Matter - Free Online Science Fiction Magazine
    Darker Matter was a free online science fiction magazine that published five issues in 2007, featuring original short stories from authors like Jerry Oltion, Jason Stoddard, and Will McIntosh alongside book reviews and articles. Now archived, the site preserves all five issues for readers to enjoy, making it a charming time capsule of early web-published speculative fiction.

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